The Power of Reading

Celebrating the power of reading stories that feel like home to shape identity and belonging.

Information about South African learners’ literacy levels has sparked renewed concern about the state of reading in the country. From reports highlighting weak foundational skills to national and international studies showing significant gaps in reading comprehension, the message is clear: South Africa’s literacy challenge begins early, and it requires practical, classroom-ready solutions.

the challenges

“One of the key challenges lies in the foundations of reading itself,” explains Sherole Webster, marketing manager of Twinkl South Africa. “Research from the Reading Panel indicates that many learners lack basic letter-sound knowledge, making it difficult for them to decode words and build reading confidence. In many classrooms, teachers are also managing wide ability gaps, with learners at very different reading levels learning together.”

The language barrier

For some children, the challenge is even greater when they are taught in a language that is not their home language, making comprehension and engagement harder. Language plays a critical role. Schools that teach in African languages have historically scored significantly lower in the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) compared to English and Afrikaans schools, highlighting the urgent need for high-quality resources that support literacy development across multiple South African languages.

Limited time and access to material

Teachers are also working within tight constraints. Between lesson preparation, assessments and administrative duties, there is often little time to design differentiated activities that meet the needs of every learner. At the same time, limited access to libraries and reading materials across many communities continues to affect children’s exposure to books in both their home language and the language of learning and teaching.

resources to tackle the challenge

Against this backdrop, literacy support needs to be both practical and meaningful – strengthening foundational skills while helping children connect with what they read.

Online educational publishing platform Twinkl South Africa is shining a light on the deeper role reading plays in a child’s life. Twinkl aims to celebrate the connection between language, culture and identity, and how stories that feel familiar can help children build confidence as readers.

“In a country where children are often not being taught in their mother tongue and regularly with resources from a culture not their own, it can make it harder for them to connect to the material,” says Webster. “When learners recognise themselves – their language, culture and everyday experiences in what they read, it strengthens both comprehension and confidence.”

Locally written books

To support educators navigating these challenges, Twinkl South Africa provides a range of curriculum-aligned resources, including locally written books, designed to strengthen early reading skills while making lessons easier to deliver.

A phonics programme

Among these is Twinkl Phonics, a systematic synthetic phonics programme aligned with the CAPS curriculum that helps learners bridge the gap between sounds and reading. The platform also offers differentiated learning resources, where the same concept is available at multiple levels, allowing teachers to support both beginner and fluent readers in the same lesson.

Multilingual options

A growing library of multilingual resources in isiZulu, isiXhosa, Afrikaans and additional South African languages further supports home language instruction, helping learners grasp concepts more easily while validating their identity and cultural context.

Crucially, these materials are designed to be low-preparation and ready to use, giving teachers more time to focus on teaching rather than resource creation.

accessibility translates into benefits

When learners are supported with strong reading foundations and accessible materials, the benefits extend far beyond the classroom. Early literacy support can help build reading confidence, reduce academic anxiety, encourage a lifelong love of reading and support smoother transitions between home language learning and English instruction later in schooling.

Read more about the importance of libraries.

share the stories that feel like home

Twinkl South Africa is also encouraging educators, parents and readers to reflect on the books that shaped them growing up; the stories that sparked imagination, offered comfort or helped them understand the world around them. Readers can join the conversation by sharing their own story and tagging Twinkl South Africa on Instagram.

Discover the childhood books that made a lasting impression on ChildMag staffers, former and present.

find resources

For those looking to explore resources that support early reading and inspire young learners, Twinkl South Africa offers a range of accessible materials designed to make literacy development engaging and inclusive. Discover more and start a free trial here.

 

 

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